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Cow That Stole Christmas 10 Years Later

Cindy Zimmerman

grinch-cowThis week marks the tenth anniversary of the “cow that stole Christmas” – a day that will live in infamy for the U.S. cattle industry and one that Kendal Frazier with the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association remembers well.

Kendal recalls that NCBA received a phone call from USDA at 1:30 pm on December 23, 2003. “We immediately started to implement a crisis management plan that we had worked on for nearly 10 years in anticipation of that moment,” he said.

ncba-frazierBy taking action to get accurate information out to the public, the beef industry was able to calm American consumers’ fears about so-called mad cow disease, but the international market was a different story. “Countries around the world … immediately closed their borders to U.S. beef, and that was a tremendous fallout for our industry,” said Kendal. “We just now this year, ten years later, have reached the levels from a volume standpoint of beef exports that we had. It’s been a long road back.”

Two major milestones were reached just this year with Japan now allowing imports of beef from cattle less than 30 months of age and the approval of a final BSE rule by USDA in November, but the cow of Christmas past still haunts us. “The market is still not fully open although we are selling a lot of beef products into Japan,” said Kendal, adding that they have high hopes for the future where beef trade will no longer be impacted by BSE. “This is a dying disease,” he said. “Hopefully, we’ll have wide open markets regarding BSE in the not too distant future.”

Listen to or download my interview with Kendal here: Interview with Kendal Frazier, NCBA

Ag Groups, Audio, Beef, NCBA